T-Cash town? Food aid and mobile money in Saint Marc
T-Cash town? Food aid and mobile money in Saint Marc
- March 24, 2011
Marie sits with a group of other women outside a small vendor in Saint Mar c , Voil á mobile phone in hand. They are waiting to spend the 1600 gourdes (US$40) that Mercy Corp s just sent to their T -Cash accounts. As heads of households with IDPs (internally displaced persons) from the earthquake, they are among 5,000 recipients in Saint Marc who will receive money on their phones to buy rice, oil, beans, and cornflour from fifty small, local merchants . Our host for the day, Andrew Lucas, explains to us that this is a much more dignified way of distributing aid than MINUSTAH-guarded blind giveaways, and we wholeheartedly agree. Mercy Corps in Saint Marc are doing their best to make sure that their donations go to people who are most in need, and that their program is conducted with as much benefit to small businesses as possible.
Food aid recipients such as Marie seem to be using their mobile money without too
much trouble. Mercy Corps help recipients register for T-Cash, give them a mobile
phone, help the recipient activate their phone, train them to make payments using
their mobile accounts, give them printed instructions, and visit vendors to make sure
everything is running smoothly. Mercy Corps also employ volunteers to assist vendors
and aid recipients during the transactions. Vendors are also happy: they are moving
a lot more stock and making more money. Technical problems that crop up are worth
the extra profit. Mercy Corps monitor prices in the town and encourage customers to
seek out the lowest prices, as they normally would.
This approach–of targeting customers, merchants, agents, and billers simultaneously–
is a promising solution to
mobile banking's 'chicken-and-egg' problem
of providing enough users for agents, and enough agents for users
. It
the potential to achieve a critical mass of users that will secure mobile money's
future in Saint Marc, so long as the transition from food aid to a publicly available
service is handled correctly. At the moment, there is no fully-functioning T-Cash
outlet in Saint Marc. Indeed, having functioning agents goes against Mercy Corps's
mission, because it would allow beneficiaries to cash out the money they have been
given rather than spend it on food. But future users of mobile banking in Saint Marc
will need to be given the entire service if their town is to link up with users across
the country–and these connections are essential to the future success of mobile banking
in Haiti.
We are optimistic that Saint Marc can successfully transition to be a true T-Cash
town. But we recommend the following: that Mercy Corps and T-Cash keep a critical
eye on their joint operation to ensure that there is no conflict of interest; that
they work closely with customers, merchants and agents in Saint Marc to ensure the
development of a publicly available service rather than a closed aid program; and
that they encourage link-up between different agents around the country. We also encourage
TchoTcho Mobile to establish a strong presence in Saint Marc, in order to ensure that
mobile banking in Haiti is competitive and prices stay low. Resolving the chicken-and-egg
problem is not just about achieving a balance between users and agents; it is also
about ensuring that different chickens are laying the eggs, and that the eggs can
be transferred from one basket to another.
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